Archive for the ‘Apple Inc.’ Category

iPhone OS 4.0 aka Mac OS X Touch 1.0 [updated x4]

Tuesday, January 5th, 2010

Time to jump on the rumour mill and predict, with scary accuracy what Apple’s event due to take place at the end of January (’10), will hold.

Update: Looks like once again I have been spot on with my Apple predictions. I have linked to stories confirming my assertions where appropriate.

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2010 Technology Predictions (part 1)

Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009

I love the prediction season, mainly because you can generate 1000s of page loads without thinking about it.

First the scores for some of last years predictions form The Guardian and myself.

Let’s start with a banker. No self-replicating worm for Mac OSX or the iPhone’s OSX by the end of the year.

FAIL. Too bad. We’ve had 2! There is an argument that it’s not a real worm because; a, It only attacks Jail-broken iPhones and b, It only effected Australians.

ZFS won’t be built into the kernel for Snow Leopard; it’ll be an optional install, for server honchos.

Well, half right, half wrong. I’ll give it a C-.

The iPhone software will be updated to 3.x, which will bring copy-and-paste and photo messaging. About time.

B+, only because these were such easy predictions.

Please read Charles Arthur’s full article as I have only cherry picked a few quotes.

5 Christmas Presents for App Developers

Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009

$99 get you quite a lot as an Apple iPhone developer; invites to Tech Talks, an Apple employee spending hours reviewing you Apps and of course the ability to list your App on iTunes.
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Displaying Twitter messages using Growl

Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009

It’s been well-over a year since I hacked the the first few lines of code for Trowel, the open source, Perl solution to your Twitter and Growl needs.
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Twitter & Growl — real world solutions

Monday, November 23rd, 2009

By-far-and-away the most popular blogs I have ever written are How To: Growl and Twitter and Twitter + Growl = Trowel v1.0.

These simple how to’s, provide a solution to a simple problem. How do I pipe my Twitter time line to Growl?
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Apple’s Misdirection? [Updated]

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

Over the last year this blog has argued the case for Apple’s mobile device strategy, I think this post sums it up nicely.

However, while I and every other tech journalist and blogger have been concentrating on the hardware, Apple has been secretly (duh!) plotting its most audacious product to-date.
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11 Early Christmas Presents from Apple

Friday, November 6th, 2009

It would be very nice to see these in my stocking come the 25th of December, but I don’t hold out much hope.

  1. Virtualized Snow Leopard — developers would love the ability to run multiple copies of Snow Leopard on there 8-core Mac Pro. And all it would take is a change to the licence agreement.
  2. FireFox on the iPhone — I can honestly see this happening, but with one caveat, it’ll cost you. A change in SDK terms might allow paid-for-apps to replace existing functionality.
  3. Family Pack of iTablets — 3 devices for $999.99, runs the iPhone OS but with keyboard and mouse support. A Kindle/Netbook killer!
  4. iPhone discounts for developers — we sold 2 billion f**king Apps! How about some love, 2 per year at 80% off?
  5. UK App Store Promo Codes — all I can say to this is AHHHHHHHHHHH! How can I get Jemima Kiss to review my amazing App if she has to buy it!
  6. Apple TV that works — it’s easy; Blue Ray player, Hulu, iPlayer and 4OD support. Job done. Drop the price by £50 / $100 and you have instant living room domination.
  7. WWDC Europe — I love San Francisco but a London or Paris event would make a lot of people happy
  8. Playing nice with Google Voice — Apple and Google do some much better against Microsoft when they’re not fighting
  9. Buy Adobe — you’ve got the cash, you could kill Flash (or make it better), 64 bit Photoshop, …, etc, etc
  10. End the exclusivity, sell more iPhone — iPhones account for more than 40% of smartphone sales in countries with out exclusivity (i.e. France). How many more of my amazing Apps would I sell if iPhone got a 2-5x market increase? Enough to stop plugging it every 5 minutes.
  11. Buy Dell and install Snow Leopard on every computer, just for fun

Stackoverflow iPhone App — solving non-existant problems

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009

This weekend I decided to solve a problem that only existed in my head, namely that of no official (or unofficial) Stackoverflow iPhone App.

There have been some questions raised about the possibilities of an API to allow such an App but, alas no noticeable development effort.
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Apple Tablet — The “digital watch” of 2010

Saturday, August 1st, 2009

The rumour mill has been swirling – Apple Tablet they cry. “Doom to fail” they sneer. I’m not so stupid as to predict an Apple device to fail, if we’ve learnt anything since SJ’s return it’s that, Apple learns from it’s mistakes!

I shall enumerate these “mistakes” and point out the silver lining:

1. Apple Cube… Mac Mini and Apple TV
2. Newton (and killing it)… iPhone/iPod Touch
3. Mac Clones… Intel processors
4. No iPhone SDK (at launch)… The App Store
5. Apple TV… Apple TV 2
6. Apple TV 2TBA

Recently I wrote a post called iDevice, the one paragraph that keeps popping into my head is this:

Back in the late 90’s when Steve came back to Apple he gave a Keynote (I have it on VHS somewhere), where he talked about the similarities of digital watches and computers (bare with me). He pointed out that in the 80’s the average American household had 1 digital watch and today (late 90’s) it’s 8 (NB: I’m writing form memory but the point stands). — iDevice

I now believe this to been even more relevant. Any new iDevice from Apple will try and fill the gap between laptop and iPhone. Just as we all now own 8 digital watches we’ll all have 3 or 4 iPads/iDevices/What-ever by the dawn of the next decade.

Apple has no interest in Netbooks, it has MacBooks to fill that gap. It is however, very interested in selling a few billion more Apps and defining an entirely new market segment.

The killer App here is an eBook reader, but not necessarily for novels. The iPhone SDK 3.0 has in App purchase, and the ability for subscriptions. My guess is; newspapers and magazines.

Download the OK Magazine App or New York Times App, the publishers finally get a revenue from online content, Apple gets 30% (or more like 10% form big publishers) and you get the daily papers downloaded to your iDevice before you leave the house in the morning — ready to read on the train.

Add to the mix; games, web access, external keyboard and mouse and you get a Netbook killer not iPhone sales eroding.

Don’t expect an Office type suite, Google Docs or what ever Microsoft are calling Office online today, (Office Live.Net XP SP 3?) will do just fine thanks (oh and Apple’s own Mobile Me).

The best guess for price will be $100 more that the most expensive iPod Touch. But, a subscription to a mobile data plan at $10 / month might half that price. Apple want you to buy 2 or more of these; office, lounge, bed room and one for the kids. So a 3 pack — as bizarre as it sounds — is a real option, maybe for as little as $899 (with a data plan). You can’t get a MacBook for that, the family pack; 3 iDevices for under $1000 would be very attractive.

*Pricing: I’ve used $ and not £ values because Apple seem to price every thing in $ and then use their own exchange rate to convert to £. I love to see 3 devices for £500 but it’ll be more like £800.

Profanity: Pushing the Boundaries at the App Store

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

Appy Go Lucky today released their first iPhone App. It was a long hard slog, involving calls form Apple HQ in Cupertino and bizarre conversations about the meaning of, Gypo.
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